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PNG's Chief Justice charged with sedition
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'Stolen Generation' stories collected
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ATM fees scrapped for remote communities
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Romney advertises day one promises
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Wine making under threat in Egypt
25 May 12 | 3:00
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PNG's Chief Justice charged with sedition
25 May 12 | 2:14
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ATM fees scrapped for remote communities
25 May 12 | 1:00
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'Stolen Generation' stories collected
25 May 12 | 2:00
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Blind Chinese activist speaks out
25 May 12 | 2:00
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The story of the 'second Anzacs'
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Trafficking victim to face alleged captor
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Al Qaeda supports Syrian rebels
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Students invent super slippery 'Liqui-Glide'
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Wine making under threat in Egypt
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Romney advertises day one promises
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India: oil prices down but fuel prices rise
25 May 12 | 1:00
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Nuclear disaster leftovers spread across Japan
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G8 pledges $A5.77b in health aid
The G8 has pledged $US5 billion ($A5.77 billion) to help fight child and maternal illness.
Leaders from the Group of Eight industrialised countries have pledged $US5 billion ($A5.77 billion) to help fight child and maternal illness.
But the proposals faced an immediate barrage of criticism from development groups, who accused leaders of trying to mask previous unfulfilled promises to help millions out of poverty.
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said all G8 countries had pitched in to the $US5 billion Muskoka Initiative, named after the lake-dotted Canadian region where G8 leaders gathered.
"We are committed to moving the world towards the day when women in developing countries will not die or suffer disabilities from pregnancy or childbirth," he said.
But anti-poverty activists were unimpressed.
"The G8 is trying to quietly shelve their promise to deliver $US50 billion ($A57.74 billion) in extra aid by this year," said Oxfam's Mark Fried. "Leaders must not be allowed to shirk their responsibility to the world's poor."
At a G8 meeting in Scotland in 2005, leaders vowed to increase development aid by $US50 billion by 2010, a target that has fallen $US20 billion ($A23.09 billion) short, according to Oxfam.
Nevertheless, Harper insisted: "The scepticism this time is not warranted. I think any money we get here pledged to this particular initiative, I am confident that will be delivered.
"I don't think you will again see leaders go out and make pledges that they don't intend to keep or that they really haven't thought about very thoroughly."
The Canadian premier admitted there may have been some reluctance to pledge larger sums as many of the economies represented around the table still labour under the weight of the worst financial crisis in a generation.
Canada, which escaped the world financial crisis largely unscathed, pledged around $US1 billion ($A1.15 billion) of new funds, a full 20 per cent of the total.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation pledged $US1.5 billion ($A1.73 billion).
But, as high-profile UN Millennium Development Goals slip beyond reach, including the goal of reducing maternal mortality by three quarters, pressure is building for rich countries to act regardless of budgetary constraints.
"Canada has managed to find at least $US1.1 billion ($A1.27 billion) to spend on a week of G8 and G20 security, and $US1.1 billion over five years for health in poor countries," said Guillaume Grosso of development lobby group One.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon welcomed the initiative but said more should be done.
"I sincerely hope that other countries will also follow Canadian examples, but we need much, much more at this time," he told Canadian broadcaster CBC.
"Despite the economic and financial crisis, industrialised countries, particularly G8 and other OECD countries, they should keep their promises which they have already made."
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